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by anarazel
2693 days ago
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> It's random because pretty much anyone could volunteer that opinion. By diagnosing the problem, making a patch and reaching out the author has already made their intention of fixing the problem clear. Unless it has been established that the problem isn't valid a workaround isn't really relevant. I'm baffled by this. Even if the fix had been immediately committed, the workaround of using nointr still would have been valuable, because a fixed version of postgres wouldn't immediately have been released. You seem to argue in a way that entirely counteract your own later comments. |
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It is often the same with software. Good feedback on software isn't random ideas, suggestions or feature requests that adds hundreds of hours of work on a whim. It is feedback that considers the work that has already been done. Anyone can come up with something else, especially in theory and with a blank slate. It doesn't really require anything other than an opinion. Hacker News certainly is proof of that.